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Additional resources for this
issue of HISTORY NOW
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Teaching American History to Muslim Exchange Students
For general background on the State Department program
of American Studies Institutes for Undergraduates, see
this 2003 press release:
http://exchanges.state.gov/
education/amstudy/archives/
2003/institutes03.htm
Your best guide to resources for this program is Washington
College's own website, describing its participation
in the State Department's American Studies for Undergraduates
Institute:
http://asi.washcoll.edu/
Here you'll find an outline of the curriculum and non-classroom
activities and excellent links to teaching materials.
To supplement the excellent selection of materials listed
in the Washington College site, you'll find useful additions
in the Gilder Lehrman Collection. Do searches for "Declaration
of Independence", and "Monroe Doctrine" and "Constitution",
and you'll find a generous choice of documents:
http://www.gilderlehrman.org/search/chooser.html?words=&x=4&y=13
For materials relating to the Constitution and the early
years of the Republic, go to:
http://www.gilderlehrman.org/collection/treasures2.html
And don't forget the resources for African-American
history given in the discussion of sources for the "Voting
Rights" essay.
For lesson plans, methodology, and the like, you may
want to investigate pertinent ERIC Digests:
Materials relating to teaching American Islamic students:
http://www.ericdigests.org/1999-4/arab.htm
Teaching the Bill of Rights:
http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-929/rights.htm
Teaching the Declaration of Independence:
http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-4/independence.html
Teaching "America's Founding Documents":
http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-3/documents.htm.
To share some of the non-classroom experiences of the
students in the Washington College program, go to the
website for the historic town where the college is located:
http://www.chestertown.com/
A nd the website at the National Gallery of Art for
the Islamic Art Exhibition drawn from the collections
of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London that the
students visited:
http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/islamicinfo.htm
And don't forget to take an online tour of United Nations
headquarters in New York:
http://www.un.org/Pubs/CyberSchoolBus/untour/index.html
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